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North Korea's Wakeup Call
Townhall.com ^ | Townhall.com | Phyllis Schlafly

Posted on 12/25/2012 7:22:00 AM PST by Kaslin

It should have been a loud wakeup call in December when North Korea successfully launched a three-stage rocket delivering a payload in orbit around the globe. This event was North Korea's boast that it now has basic intercontinental ballistic missile technology.

North Korea's test was a surprise to Americans, to the Obama administration and to Congress because its last couple of tests had been failures. More alarming was the fact that the launch was a surprise to our intelligence community, which didn't know the North Koreans had perfected this technology, and didn't anticipate a launch.

There should have been an immediate demand that the Obama administration fulfill its constitutional duty to "provide for the common defense." What could be a more important duty, and a more pressing need for spending our tax dollars, than to save Americans from being incinerated by nuclear bombs?

Ballistic missiles combined with nuclear or chemical weapons are the way an evil enemy country without an air force or military can project power outside of its borders and threaten the United States. Rockets and missiles are the weapons of choice for terrorists and rogue groups to project power and threaten us.

An unprecedented number of countries have now acquired or are trying to acquire ballistic missiles armed with warheads of mass destruction. North Korea has more than two nuclear weapons and over a thousand ballistic missiles, and Iran has over a thousand ballistic missiles and is working as fast as it can to get nuclear weapons.

Homeland defense should not mean merely tidying up after a hurricane or tornado, housing a few thousand people in makeshift tents and setting up food kitchens. North Korea's successful missile launch dramatizes the fact that homeland defense demands that our government do something we cannot do for ourselves: have a functioning system that will shoot down enemy missiles before they kill Americans.

An operational U.S. anti-missile defense system is not only vital to save lives, but it's the best deterrent to war and attack. We now know that Ronald Reagan won the Cold War at Reykjavik without firing a shot (as Margaret Thatcher famously said) when Reagan refused to abandon or trade away his plans for anti-missile defense.

The Nixon-Ford-Kissinger strategy for holding the giant Soviet missile threat at bay was MAD (Mutual Assured Destruction), i.e., our threat to retaliate and wipe Russia off the map. But MAD would be no deterrent to the terrorists because they are all too eager to commit suicide.

When President Reagan announced his plan to build an anti-missile defense, the Left went on the attack, calling it Star Wars and denying that it was possible to knock out an incoming missile in space, a feat often described as hitting bullet with bullet. Nobody any longer argues that an anti-missile defense doesn't work, and the United States has had over 50 successes in its missile defense testing.

Israel proved the effectiveness and efficiency of anti-missile defense with its Iron Dome system, which by November 2012 had intercepted more than 400 rockets aimed at Israel's population. Israel's system is designed to intercept and destroy short-range rockets and artillery shells fired from distances up to 70 kilometers, and it accomplished its assigned task.

The United States has some missile defense interceptors in place, but almost none to protect the eastern seaboard of our country. The United States needs to be equally protected and defended, from Alaska and Hawaii to our East Coast.

The United States spends about $700 billion annually on national defense, of which only 1 percent is spent on missile defense development and acquisition. We should strive for 2 percent of our defense budget in order to give anti-missile defense the priority and resources we so urgently need and to start a realistic modernization program.

The American people must be educated about the fact that a single nuclear weapon exploded 100 miles above the United States could create electromagnetic pulse effects, thereby bringing our entire economy to a standstill. We could lose for many months all our electric power, our communications, transportation, banking and other critical infrastructure systems.

That would be like a return to the 18th century. But we no longer have the agrarian society that supported Americans in those olden days because we now import the majority of our food.

Because of the growing missile threat from hostile states and terrorists, the first duty of our government is to make deployment of a multi-layered missile defense system to protect the entire United States our urgent national priority.


TOPICS: Editorial
KEYWORDS: bho44; bhoasia; kimjongun; nationalsecurity; nknukes; northkorea; safetyandsecurity; schlafly

1 posted on 12/25/2012 7:22:13 AM PST by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin
Who cares? I got my OBAMAPHONE!!!

(Merry Christmas!)

2 posted on 12/25/2012 7:29:20 AM PST by Jeff Chandler (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tpAOwJvTOio)
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To: Kaslin

The U.S. already deploys 3 layers of anti-missile protection courtesy of President Bush:

1. 30+ GMD mid-course interceptors in Alaska, California, and 1 in Huntsville, Alabama.

2. 2,500+ boost phase, mid-course, and terminal phase SM-2 and SM-3 interceptors on 27 AEGIS destroyers and missile frigates around the world.

3. Large numbers of Patriot terminal-phase interceptors on army bases around the U.S.

The above is substantial-enough that the 4th phase, the Airborne Laser, was mothballed due to lack of a threat.


3 posted on 12/25/2012 7:29:27 AM PST by Southack (Media Bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: Kaslin
When I was a weatherman in the US Navy during the worse days of the Cold War—we had to collect data and draw up charts predicting where the current upper air patterns would drive the clouds of nuclear fallout in the event of a Soviet attack...

...that way we knew where to move the fleets in order to avoid the deadly radioactive smog.

If I remember correctly, the prevailing upper air systems above the Korea's trend eastward nearly all of the time.

This information is important because if North Korea provokes a nuclear exchange all of South Korea and most of Japan will be decimated by the toxic clouds of lingering death floating down from the hydrogen bomb retaliation detonations from those who the North Koreans attacked...

...a “collateral damage” scenario the Chicoms would not only not cry over but one they may have been planning all along.

4 posted on 12/25/2012 7:41:22 AM PST by Happy Rain ("Banning the 2nd Amendment over Adam Lanza would be like banning the 1st Amendment over Bill Maher.")
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To: Kaslin

The article states: “North Korea’s test was a surprise to Americans, to the Obama administration and to Congress because its last couple of tests had been failures. “

As a former Navy Intelligence Officer, I say that is B.S. The intelligence community knows what is going on unless the Obamaites have so destroyed our intelligence community now that we are sucking wind sitting around reading the head of the C.I.A.’s emails.


5 posted on 12/25/2012 8:05:11 AM PST by svxdave (Life is too short to wear a fake Rolex.)
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To: svxdave

I’ll agree with you to a point, mostly because I need to do a bit of fact checking first. I agree because “The One” has indicated the US needs to be prepared to deal with threats from North Korea and has shifted military planning toward this and away from the Middle East. At the time I read this, I thought these folks had lost their marbles, but then perhaps our military folks knew/know more than I (as they obviously should). Apparently, the Administration’s “surprise” is simply disinformation or at least some of it is.

What really bothers me here is the fact that Slick Willie gave the Chicoms advanced satellite equipment via Loral and that this gave the Chinese at least a 20 year jump forward in their rocket capabilities. Put this equipment on Iranian rockets and we see greater threats not only in control capability but in distance. The Norks have just proved it.


6 posted on 12/25/2012 8:45:21 AM PST by miele man
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To: Kaslin
It was totally “unexpected” by members of the Obama administration. And, what a clueless pack of cretins (apologies to cretins everywhere) these people are! More bumbling boobs in one place (Washington, DC) than can be imagined.
7 posted on 12/25/2012 9:05:25 AM PST by MasterGunner01
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To: Southack

“interceptors in Alaska, California, and 1 in Huntsville, Alabama.”

In Alabama?


8 posted on 12/25/2012 9:38:45 AM PST by PastorBooks
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To: svxdave
The article states: “North Korea’s test was a surprise to Americans, to the Obama administration and to Congress because its last couple of tests had been failures. “

*facepalm*

A failure is the most educational thing possible in something like this

9 posted on 12/25/2012 11:07:50 AM PST by GeronL (http://asspos.blogspot.com)
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To: Kaslin
We now know that Ronald Reagan won the Cold War at Reykjavik without firing a shot (as Margaret Thatcher famously said) when Reagan refused to abandon or trade away his plans for anti-missile defense.

This is a myth.

Numerous proxy wars were fought by the USSR and the US. In some cases Soviet and American troops actually fought each other.

10 posted on 12/25/2012 11:59:53 AM PST by Ajnin (Neca eos omnes. Deus suos agnocet!)
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To: Kaslin
The United States has some missile defense interceptors in place, but almost none to protect the eastern seaboard of our country. The United States needs to be equally protected and defended, from Alaska and Hawaii to our East Coast.

Leave us not forget Venezuela's and Hugo Chavez snuggling up to assorted left wing crazies (Including Iran). If he acquires nuclear weapons and medium range (2500 mi) rockets they could threaten the largest complex of oil refiners and petrochemical companies in the US not to mention a big chunk of our oil/natural gas supplies.

Cuban missile crisis redux? This time around with no warning.

Regards,
GtG

11 posted on 12/25/2012 2:04:05 PM PST by Gandalf_The_Gray (I live in my own little world, I like it 'cuz they know me here.)
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To: Happy Rain

Should I be buying iodine? Live in Los Angeles.


12 posted on 12/25/2012 3:32:35 PM PST by 4Liberty (Some on our "Roads & Bridges" head to the beach. Others head to their offices, farms, libraries....)
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To: Jeff Chandler

Who cares, I started getting POST-Holiday Sale e-mail spam!


13 posted on 12/25/2012 3:34:24 PM PST by Revolting cat! (Bad things are wrong! Ice cream is delicious!)
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